The LJS: A Guide to the Building

The LJS: A Guide to the Building Rebuilt 1988-1991 ------------------------------------------------------------------------This Guide Revised Jan 2016...
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The LJS: A Guide to the Building Rebuilt 1988-1991 ------------------------------------------------------------------------This Guide Revised Jan 2016 Price £ 2. 80

The Liberal Jewish Synagogue 28 St John’s Wood Road, London NW8

Tel: 0207 286 5181, email: [email protected]

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Historical Introduction The Liberal Jewish Synagogue moved from a converted chapel in Hill Street, NW1, to the present site in 1925. The building (architect Ernest Joseph), seating 1,400 people, was dedicated on 13th September 1925; its frontage with portico is shown in the adjacent 1925 drawing. Synagogues have been built with porticos (and see page 2) since 1820 in Budapest and the Greek revival style spread and remains popular in the United States where the buildings are commonly called ‘temples’.

In

November 1940 the building sustained bomb damage; it was restored in 1950. But in 1984 the discovery of serious structural defects made

it

necessary either to

repair or to rebuild. The decision was taken to redevelop the site, selling part of a long lease on some of the land for flats, to help finance the rebuilding. The project was put out to competition. The Fitzroy Robinson Partnership, in association with Preston Rubin, was chosen to design the shell. A firm of Israeli architects, Kantor Schwartz, working closely with their London associates, Koski Solomon, was commissioned to design the Sanctuary. Abbey National Homes purchased the right to build the flats above, and by the beginning of 1988 all the necessary contracts had been signed with them and the main builders, John Mowlem plc. The farewell service was held on 30th April 1988, after which the congregation moved to temporary premises in Loudoun Road. The new building opened with a service of dedication on 13th January 1991. A new room was added in 2012, see page 13. Plan: The final page shows a plan of the ground floor of the building; numbers in square brackets in the following text refer to the plan. Courtyard In front of the portico [1], the brick-paved courtyard allows parking for vehicles and bicycles and has several original trees.

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Front Elevation The portico [1 on Plan] is built of Portland stone and was presented in 1924 by Bernhard Baron in memory of his wife to the LJS for the original building. The six ionic columns are surmounted by a heavy entablature with a coffered ceiling {see photo on the cover); the rear wall is of ashlar (hewn stone) with an engaged pilaster at each end. In 1988 the portico was taken down and stored for three years in Docklands while the new synagogue was being built. In 1990 it was cleaned and reinstated 1.2 metres from its original position.

Between the two main entrance doors and below the window is the foundation stone of the new building laid on 24 September 1989. A second stone to the right of the doors commemorates the opening of the LJS on 13 January 1991 by the then President, Maxwell Stern. A third date is marked without explanation, to the left of the foundation stone on the lowest course, between the window and the left hand door; this marks the place where a time canister was placed on 14th November 1989. A list of the contents can be found in the Appendix on page 14.

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The front facade replicates the original facade of the 1925 building; the apparent windows are dummies to appear as in the original building, to comply with planning requirements. The main doors are of oak with mahogany inlay from a sustainable source.

Main Entrance Once through the doors into the front foyer [2 on plan] one sees the archway of Jerusalem stone in a wall of deep red maramarina, a material processed from crushed marble. This wall has a central slit allowing a view of the Sanctuary; the slit is on axis with the ner tamid and the ark [6], providing a glimpse but not a window. It was the architect’s intention that the move from secular to sacred should be accomplished by a downward movement. Bronze handrails indicate the way down into the Sanctuary. There is no central door; everyone entering does so from a radial direction, emphasising the non-hierarchical character of Liberal Judaism. The wall between the two entrance doors holds the memorial [3] to the six million Jews who perished in the Sho'ah (Holocaust). The stone, a three-ton Kilkenny limestone, is the work of the eminent sculptor Anish Kapoor (born in Bombay of a Jewish mother 1954, he has practiced in London since the 1970s) and was worked on for several months (photo in LJS News June ’96) and dedicated on 10th November 1996 (report in News, Dec). the 58th anniversary of Kristallnacht (Night of the Broken Glass). The sculpture is located on an axis with the Ark and ner tamid; the polished black of the void at the stone's centre reflects one's own inverted image as well as the light from the slot in the Sanctuary wall. The Hebrew inscription on the floor reads: 'We have vowed to remember', from a poem “Neder” by the Israeli Avraham Shlonsky (1900-1973). A postcard picture of the memorial can be purchased. The front foyer provides a protected meeting place; the sense of space derives in part from the cool marble floor, which picks up the pinkish tones of the Jerusalem stone. A plaque records the 50th anniversary in 2003 of Rabbi Rayner’s ordination. On the right of the main entrance is a small Bride’s Room; the toilet facilities and sofa-bed enable this room to be also used as a first-aid room. To the left stands a heavy menorah (Chanukiah) made by Frank Meisler (born 1929 in Danzig, came to England with Kindertransport,

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he worked in Israel from 1960, has made Kindertransport sculpture at Liverpool Street Station in 2006, he has a showroom in Jaffa), it remains here except when it is taken into the Sanctuary for the 8-day festival of Chanukah. It is of pewter, shows the Lions of Judah, silver plated, guarding the tree of life (gilt); the Hebrew refers to the Festival of Light The Sanctuary [4]

Inside the Sanctuary the space, conceived as octagonal, is divided into four zones: the central 90 seats surround the oak bimah which extends into that space as an apron, seen in the photo. The design brief was to provide a welcoming atmosphere even if the number of people present were small; this was achieved by the seating plan, variable lighting program and extended bimah. This inner area is enclosed by the hakafot aisle (processional, allowing a scroll to be carried around). There are a further 300 seats behind that aisle. An extension [7] to the right of the bimah is closed off with panels for most of the year (when the regular seating downstairs is usually adequate), but can seat a further 100 when used at High Holydays and other major occasions.. Upstairs the fourth and largest zone, the gallery, seats 500 when extra seating is needed. From the gallery the sightlines reach only to the upper bimah and so when the gallery is in use, the apron of the extended bimah is retracted and the service conducted more formally from the upper level. This retraction

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coincidentally provides space for 30 additional seats downstairs. At the festival of Simchat Torah the apron is retracted to give space for dancing with the scrolls. At Sukkot the front of the bimah is decorated with fruit, vegetables and greenery. The lighting control has several preset programs and can provide bright normal intensity or softer lighting for reflective occasions; the small central area around the bimah can be lit in a way which separates it from the rest of the Sanctuary on occasions when only a few people are present. .In 2011-12 low-energy lights bulbs were installed and. the sound system (microphones and loudspeakers) was upgraded. Above the central seating area is a broad lantern slatted with American cherry, admitting natural light. Seating A prototype chair was developed in American cherry for the LJS by the designer Bob Pulley; his intention was to avoid the harsh lateral transverse lines of traditional pews and to give the Sanctuary a peopled look even when empty (see picture on page 4). Acoustically the Sanctuary is at its best with the ground floor filled and as little absorbent matter as possible upstairs. Cushions on the front seats have been replac ed by hand-stitched ones patterned to match the bimah chairs. During services the choir sits next to the organ in the main body of the Sanctuary, so that they are part of the service with the congregation. The loft above the ark was designed as an alternative choir location for crowded or particularly solemn occasions with CCTV and an audio-visual link between the organist below and the choirmaster in the loft, but it has not been thus used in recent years and now the loft serves as the music office. The electronic organ was designed by Copeman Hart for the new sanctuary and particularly for the strong nineteenth century tradition of Jewish liturgical music. It uses the Bradford system of digital synthesis and has four manuals (keyboards). The bass speakers are concealed beneath the bimah. The Bimah [5] The bimah itself is made of oak as are the three lecterns (removable when not required). The retractable apron is manually controlled and locked into place when in use. The bimah is enclosed by a high curved wall of Jerusalem stone, which continues into the body of the Sanctuary and is

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picked up again in the arch in the front foyer (page 3). The stone was quarried from Hebron by a family whose employees had traditional skills of tooling the stone. The wall was hand-finished in London by a team of Israelis. The finish is coarse at ground level, becoming finer as it rises. The pink tone is known as ya’ta and was chosen by LJS members from a wall of samples sent over from Israel in the early stages of the rebuilding. The ark [6] was designed as the focus of the wall; the doors are a mesh of metals set in frames of bronze. The design and inset of the doors were carried out in Israel by sculptor Amit Schur, while the bronze frame and closing mechanism were manufactured under her direction in Sheffield. Schur’s intention was to allow glimpses of the scrolls without distracting from the service while the doors remained closed; there was to be a suggestion of the core element of Torah whilst retaining the full effect for when the doors were opened at the height of the service. The transparency of the doors increases towards the top.

‫עבדו את יהוה בשמחה‬

Above the doors the inscription reads:

which means: Serve the Eternal One with Joy (Psalm 100 v.2). The ark doors are set above a cabinet of figured oak.

The photo above shows the ark with doors fully or partly open, the ner tamid above and the rimmonim stand and two of the bimah chairs. Five Torah scrolls rest securely in the Ark except

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when one (two on Simchat Torah) is taken out to be read. Four of these have been acquired by purchase or donation over the years; the most recent was presented by a member, in memory of his mother, on the occasion of our 75th Anniversary in 1986. All are between 100 and 150 years old. One of the two large scrolls is Sephardi, probably from Iraq and written on leather rather than the usual parchment. The fifth, on permanent loan from the Czech Scrolls Memorial Trust, numbered 944, is one of the 1564 scrolls brought to this country from Prague in 1964; sadly, nothing is known of its provenance. Another Czech scroll, Number 172, from Moravske Budejovice, is kept in the Children’s Ark in the Assembly Hall (page 11). The ner tamid (eternal light) above the ark was made, to a wishbone design by Amit Schur, by Box Products, complementing the curved wall of the bimah; its live flame fed by lamp oil was lit at the first service in the new building on 13th January 1991. Two LJS members collaborated in the design and making of a new set of rimonim (scroll regalia). The rimonim themselves and the pointer were then donated by their respective parents. A stand for the regalia was designed in bronze by the architect Les Koski so as to intrude as little as possible on the line of the curved wall. The scroll covers previously were of blue velvet with gilt embroidery; new covers were designed by Diana Springhall (a well known British textile artist and lecturer) in 1997 (see LJS News, April 97). The silk ground of grey and pink provides a link with the panels of the ark doors whilst the stripe, used in an oblique direction, underlines the connection using the same geometric shape. Copper, gold and silver fabrics were chosen to achieve a reflecting focal point and to be strong enough to complement the bronze doors. A matching loose piece of fabric covers the scroll on the desk before it is read. On High Holydays the scroll covers are replaced by white covers with embroidered motifs, e g as shown on the right. For weddings a chuppah is raised over the extended bimah: usually this is a fine white tallit which is suspended by thin cords (photo in LJS News, Jan 1995) over those taking part in the ceremony. The more conventional chuppah of poles and canopy has been retained as an option. The bimah chairs are based on the design of the seats in the body of the Sanctuary, to emphasise that those taking the service are also part of the congregation. The bimah chairs are upholstered in tapestry embroidered by over 100 members during 1990/2. The design was the original work of Jane Finestone; each seat back embodies a motif indicating its theme from selichah (forgiveness) for Yom Kippur to cherut (freedom) for Pesach. The wool for the tapestry was donated by the Royal Wilton factory, which also made the carpet throughout the building to an original design. The story of this work is told in

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detail elsewhere (LJS News, photos November 1992 & report Jan 1993). Two extra lower-back chairs were constructed and donated in 2010. The Sanctuary and Montefiore Hall are fitted with induction 1oops for the benefit of those with hearing aids. Grills above the front doors and below the gallery admit heated air. A video camera is focused on the bimah from the gallery and used for “streaming” services. The sound system is also regularly used to record services digitally. The excellent acoustics of the sanctuary allow it to be used for occasional concerts. The rear Sanctuary wall is coloured with maramarina as in the foyer. On the wooden lintels inside the two entrance doors are separately engraved the two halves of a blessing:

‫ברוך אתה בבאך וברוך אתה בצאתך‬ Blessed shall you be when you come in/ and Blessed shall you be when you go out. (Deuteronomy 28 v.6). (These blessings were incorporated after Rabbi John Rayner saw them similarly inscribed in the 17th century synagogue in Dubrovnik.) The incised wording was in-filled with gilding in 2010 to make it more visible. Side entrance This is the everyday entrance to the building; it is ramped outside for wheelchair access. From the side entrance there are stairs down to the underground car park in which the LJS has eight spaces for the rabbis, administrative staff and occasional use by members. Corridor to Rear Foyer From the front entrance the rear foyer [13] is reached by a curving corridor which follows the line of the Sanctuary [1], so that one is always aware of what lies inside the dividing wall. On one side are the two stairs to the gallery, on the other display cases set into recesses of Jerusalem stone. Here are changing exhibits such as archival material,. as used for a Centenary exhibition, now for pictures of Rabbi Israel Mattuck. The lift in the corridor is large enough to take a wheelchair and attendant; the adjacent stairs leads to the offices above, and the lower ground floor (see page 12). Notice-boards here display current information about the congregation. Adjoining toilets include facilities for wheelchair users and a baby changing area. Rear Foyer [13] Coming from the corridor to the rear foyer the eye is drawn in several directions, and there is often an atmosphere of activity. Facing is the large communal Montefiore Hall [9] and a view straight out into the courtyard and John Rayner Room [14]. The hall's relatively low ceiling

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provides air conditioning; its height was the result of a decision to add valuable meeting rooms above on the first floor. A full size demountable stage can be kept loaded on to a trolley in the large store when not in use, and an ark designed by Barry Feldman and donated in 2002 is erected

here

for

the

High

Holyday s; it has wooden doors with an open wave pattern, a potion is shown at the right. On Saturday mornings the hall is used to serve coffee before the service and kiddush is celebrated there afterwards. In the rear foyer [13], there are three chairs presented in 1993 with tapestry embroidered by members with a design (one back is pictured) based on a 13th cent. Hebrew manuscript, in the style of the bimah chairs (two more are in the upper foyer), and a mural, seen in the photo at the right,, of the three pilgrimage festivals, Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot, follows the curves of the Sanctuary

wall.

This

was

painted for the Hall of the original building in 1981 (see LJ News, Oct 1993), by Bill Utermohlen (born USA 1933, who worked in London from 1962, he also painted a mural for the Royal Free Hospital, died 2007), the mural was donated by the family of a member

Jonas

Sellar

and

reinstated under the artist’s direction in 1993. A copy portrait of Claude Montefiore in doctoral dress, by Christopher Williams, hangs outside the Montefiore Hall. Access to the Sanctuary is from each corner; the front entrances are described on page 3. From

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the rear foyer there are two other entrances; a ramp enables wheelchair users to enter near the bimah where two spaces on level floor are left permanently free. Seats can be removed if more wheelchair users are expected. The side entrance is the most commonly used, in preference to the formal front entrance. Here a kiosk displays Judaica for sale and a range of information leaflets, as well as the current LJS and LJ newsletters .On either side of this entrance are the library, kitchen and nursery - books, food and children key elements in every Jewish community. A custom-made display cabinet with LED lights, for Archive material, now used for publications, was installed in November 2012 near the Hall. The Israel Abrahams Library [12] is an excellent resource for research as well as a popular lending library for the congregation. It is a bright and pleasant room with a small sitting area and a large table for study. The Library houses nearly five thousand books covering a wide spectrum of writing including archaeology, biblical study, biography, fiction, history, philosophy and poetry. Periodicals as well as newsletters from other congregations are displayed. A photograph and plaque hang in the Library to commemorate the work of Rabbi Dr David Goldstein, a minister at the LJS in 1964-75. A pastel portrait of Dr. Israel Abrahams by Israel Cohen (Australian, 1884 – 1951, pictured on right) hangs on the foyer wall at the entrance to the Library. The kitchen [11] is a fully professional catering kitchen. The L shape provides two work areas flanked by store cupboards and fridge freezers. Lunch for Restaurant Tuesday, refreshments for Saturday kiddush and a number of in-house activities are prepared here. Outside caterers also use the kitchen for all types of receptions. The nursery (crèche) [10] is equipped with smallscale furniture and toilets and has direct access to the courtyard. It is used during the week by the Nursery School which is based here, and is near enough to the Sanctuary for parents to be comfortable leaving children there during services.

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Upper level To reach the upper floor visitors use the broad staircase off the rear foyer. This is hung with portraits: of Claude Goldschmidt Montefiore (first President) by Sir Oswald Birley RA in 1925,

Rabbi Leslie Edgar

(these seen in the photos), Rabbi

David

Goldberg (full length, by Jane Bond RP) and Presidents Bob Kirk, Willie Kessler, Sir Peter Lazarus (who led the rebuilding program), Maxwell Stern and Colonel Sir Louis Gluckstein. Immediately to the right on leaving the stairs is the Assembly Hall, which can seat 70 people. Here is a portable ark with scroll used by the School, and a portrait (see photo) of Rabbi John Rayner (by June Mendoza OBE, she has painted many famous people). A door connects this hall with the formal Mattuck Room so that they can be used together as a suite of rooms. Hung inside this room are portraits of Rabbi Israel Mattuck (see photo; by Professor Arthur Pan, Hungarian, he also painted Churchill).and of The Hon. Lily Montagu, and a donated painting “The Rainbow” by Jacques Kupfermann (Austrian). A large digital interactive board is mounted on an end wall. A large bronze plaque to Rabbi Mattuck’s memory is affixed, taken from the Mattuck Room in the old building. In the corridor are a painting of the interior of the old sanctuary by Charlotte Halliday with chuppah, and a drawing made by E B Lyons in 1947 during repairs to the war-damaged old synagogue. The foyer of the first floor has two more tapestry chairs, and two more paintings hang on the foyer walls: “Holy Goat” by Ricky Romain and “Abraham, Sarah and the Heavenly Messengers” by Hans Feibusch (1898, Germany – 1998 London), both donated in 1991. Eleven classrooms are housed on the upper floor - some designed for smaller children and wet activities such as painting, and others more suitable for teenagers or adult students; teaching materials and library books are found in many of these rooms, and at one end is the school office. One room is available for use by volunteers. A plaque and photo commemorate Miss Marjorie Moos, Principal of the School 195966. The Nursery School class aged 4+ has a suite of two rooms and the youngest children are based in a room with its own child-size toilets installed in 2008.

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Between the classrooms for the Religion School at the rear of the building, the rabbis’ rooms and office area and kitchen at the front of the building are the upper level of the Sanctuary and two more entrances to the gallery. The original choir loft (see page 5) is accessed here and is shelved to accommodate a large collection of Jewish liturgical sheet music. Lower ground floor The lower floor is reached by two staircases and the lift. A large room is used for youth activities, the school and occasional adult education sessions. The second year of the Nursery School uses this room, which has adjacent toilets and a shower. Elsewhere in a basement an extensive secure area provides storage for the synagogue’s archives and other records. Rear courtyard & John Rayner room The nursery has direct access on to one courtyard area partially paved with a soft surface and with equipment where children can play in safety, pictured.. Another, adult, area runs next to the Montefiore Hall [to the right of number 14 on the plan] repaved in 2012, planters are installed on the rear wall, as seen below. A

pergola

above provides a framework

for

a

sukkah which extends outwards from the Hall so that people can participate while still in the hall or outside in the courtyard, The overhead framework is open to the sky according to tradition, and has hooks from which are hung fruit and vegetables during the festival of Sukkot, when foliage is placed in the trellises fixed against the rear wall (pictured in 2012). The John Rayner Room [14] was built in 2012 in the courtyard as a meeting, prayer and study room -- or Beit HaMidrash -- in memory of the synagogue's distinguished late rabbi, with funds from the John D. Rayner Appeal, launched in the 2011 centenary year. It is accessed by the western French doors of the Hall and from the main staircase hall, via a coffee-

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making area, which also has shelving for books. The room opens eastwards by a folding glass wall to the courtyard and sukkah. Displayed in a case in the south wall of the room is a 1991 gift, reinstalled, see photo on the right: a modern Noah’s Ark in glass by the eminent glass engraver Peter Dreiser MBE (1936 Cologne – 2006 London; see descriptive sheet in the room). The west wall has a projection screen which can be lowered from the ceiling. An ark with a glass panel suggestive of the Burning Bush in a wooden door has been designed by Miranda Salmon to hold one scroll and was installed in the south-west corner of the room in 2014. On the inner wall is a tapestry “Earth Sea and Sky” by Diana Springall donated in 2015.. Access for disabled people The building offers access to visitors with disabilities whether wheelchair users or not. In 1997 the LJS received an award from Jewish Care to 'acknowledge an outstanding contribution towards the improvement for people with disabilities’ (see the certificate in lobby near the side entrance). Some features already mentioned: - hearing loop in the Sanctuary and the Montefiore Hall - large print prayer books - wheelchair spaces in the Sanctuary - lift and toilet facilities for wheelchair users - ramped entrance to the building and the Sanctuary.

The Halls, Sanctuary and classrooms are available for letting, a separate brochure gives more information. Conducted visits are arranged for schools and other groups, contact the Executive Director The Liberal Jewish Synagogue28 St John’s Wood Road, London NW8 Tel: 0207 286 5181, email: [email protected]

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-------------------------------------------APPENDIX The LJS Time Capsule (see page 2) On 14 November 1989 Janet Suzman and a group of LJS members placed a time capsule under one of the stones in the portico wall. That stone is to the left of the Foundation Stone and is marked simply with the date: 14-11-89. The contents of the capsule were wrapped in acid-free archival tissue. Silica gel crystals were packed in to ensure dryness and the capsule itself was sealed with a viton closure. The items included were selected from suggestions made by LJS members and the children of the Religion School. The choice was made by Rabbi John D Rayner and Mrs. Brenda Nathanson (Chairman, Education Committee). 1. Photos of the original LJS, Loudoun Road and social activities. 2. Original 1902 membership list (photocopy). 3. Current membership list. 4. Last service at 28 St John's Wood Road. 5. Service sheet from Foundation Stone dedication. 6. Annual Report 1988. 7. Appeal Brochure. 8. LJS Newsletter. 9. ULPS News. 10. Pamphlets on history of Progressive Judaism. 11. Service of the Heart & Passover Haggadah. 12. Gate of Repentance. 13. Judaism for Today by Rabbi John D Rayner & Rabbi Bernard Hooker. 14. The Jewish People. Their history and their religion by Rabbi David J Goldberg & Rabbi John D Rayner. 15. Sermons by Rabbi John D Rayner and Rabbi Alexandra Wright. 16. Message to finder from Rabbi David J Goldberg. 17. Message to finder from Richard Moross on behalf of the children of the Religion School.

The Capsule also contained a miniature Kiddush cup and Kiddush wine.

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Original Guide 1997 written by Prue Baker & Neil Levitt Revised incl photos in 2009, 2011 & up to Jan 2016 by Bryan Diamond

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